Many of the solutions below also work with existing stores created through virtual storefronts like Shopify and Magento, so there’s no need to re-upload your inventory and slog through all that work again. Here are seven of our favorite Facebook eCommerce apps, along with pricing, reviews and more.

StoreYa.com

A StoreYa storefront on Facebook

StoreYa is well-known for its integration with Magento, a popular e-commerce platform. But what you may not know is that it also works with a number of other popular selling sites, including eBay, Etsy, Amazon, and WordPress (through WooCommerce). That means if you already have an online store set up through one of these providers, importing it to Facebook through StoreYa is just a matter of a couple clicks.

But that’s only the beginning. Where StoreYa really shines is its e-commerce marketing tools. By using their service as a storefront provider, you can access a variety of social shopping features including a coupon pop-up to reward fans for browsing your Facebook store, a Groupon-style group buying deal, a “scratch and win” coupon game and more.

StoreYa’s free plan only lets you have access to the coupon pop-up feature, which, for many small businesses looking to sell online, is plenty to start with. Premium plans start as low as $9.99/month for 500 SKUs, up to $69.99/month for 10,000 SKUs.

Overall, StoreYa’s ease of use and seamless integration with existing seller platforms make it easy to open up your store to the e-commerce potential of Facebook. It’s well worth a look whether you’re just starting out, or you have an established store with another merchant.

Storefront Social

The Storefront Social shop makes it easy to create a new store from scratch

Storefront Social is a Facebook store application that works for new businesses as well as well-established brands. Like StoreYa, it integrates with over two dozen providers. Storefront Social also works with popular self hosted shopping cart solutions such as X-Cart, 3D Cart and OS Commerce. Pricing ranges from $9.95/month for up to 100 products, to $29.95/month for up to 1,000 products. There’s a 7 day free trial.

Although Storefront Social doesn’t have the marketing features that other Facebook e-commerce apps have, it makes up for that with its connection and capability options. For example, storefronts created with the app can easily connect to Twitter, Google+ and Pinterest. It also works with international currencies and languages, and interfaces with Google Base Feed and Yahoo Commerce Central as well as CSV imports.

Perhaps the icing on the cake is that stores created with the Storefront Social app are also mobile friendly—a must-have when you’re trying to win over shoppers on Facebook.

Ecwid

Ecwid is one of the most popular e-commerce apps on Facebook

As one of the largest Facebook e-commerce apps, Ecwid’s popularity stems from its robust free plan, which lets business owners add up to 10 products. Because there are no setup or per-transaction fees, this is one of the fastest ways to start selling on Facebook if you only have a few items. Other plan tiers, ranging from $12.50/month up to $82.50/month provide varying levels of products (up to unlimited).

All pricing tiers allow for the selling of digital goods (eBooks, courses, etc.) but higher priced plans also include the ability to offer coupons, as well as manage your Facebook storefront from an iPhone app. The $29.50 and $82.50/month plans also include the option of wholesale pricing groups and product comparisons

The product itself works with a wide range of existing merchant and content management systems, including WordPress, Joomla, and even plain HTML sites. It also integrates with a variety of shipping carriers including UPS, DHL, FedEx, USPS, Australia Post, Canada Post and others.

All of Ecwid’s Facebook stores are hosted on Amazon S3, which is a digital storage network. This gives them the ability to offer unlimited bandwidth, similar to a web host—except much, much faster. Using cloud-based technology, an Ecwid storefront will load fast by choosing a data center near the user’s location. All of this is done behind-the-scenes, so as the merchant, you only need to click, upload and go.

Shopify Apps

A selection of Shopify’s 100+ user-friendly cart templates

Although not a Facebook store in the traditional sense, as many of the other Facebook e-commerce apps profiled here, Shopify stands out for its user-friendliness and integration abilities, of which Facebook is a part.

A Shopify hosted storefront lets e-commerce website owners choose from among over one hundred different store templates. Prices range from $29/month + credit card rates up to $179/month + credit card rates. The credit card rates are lower depending on the level of plan you choose.

Shopify also incorporates many other features that other providers don’t, such as a free card reader, unlimited products (on any plan), and the ability to add discount codes at checkout. Higher tiered plans provide excellent conversion optimization features such as shopping cart abandonment recovery, an option which would typically require another third party service to integrate.

As its main push is being a digital storefront, Shopify’s Facebook integration (and many other features) come in the form of apps. These range from free to paid, and many of them are created by other sites and services which “plug in” to Shopify.

Essentially, this means that you can “accessorize” your Shopified Facebook store with things like competitions, coupons, “Want” buttons, reviews and even a full-fledged customer help desk.

Despite the dozens of apps available for Shopify, it’s a good idea not to get too carried away and keep your focus on the core job of increasing fan engagement and encouraging discussion and feedback among your customers. Remember, shopping comes secondary on social networks.

ShopTab

Don’t let ShopTab’s simple layout fool you—there’s a lot of product power under the hood

ShopTab, used by well-known corporations including Coca-Cola, Fiji Water and Sensa weight loss, is named for the previous layout on Facebook, which used tabs to connect users with various sections on the site.

Despite the fact that tabs are a thing of the past, ShopTab has evolved to be a user-friendly, simply integrated solution that gives users the ability to customize a great deal of their Facebook shop.

For instance, you can choose the number of products to display on your shop’s home page, force customers to “Like” your page before they can browse (known as a “like gate”), enable Facebook mobile shopping and work with international currencies and languages.

Three pricing tiers (at $10/month, $15/month and $20/month respectively) let you add a wealth of products—up to 500, 1,000 and 5,000 for each of the plans. The more advanced plan options give you greater customization and flexibility through CSS, the ability to schedule product feeds, the ability to white label the app, and the ability to run multiple shops from a single dashboard.

At a price of $10/month, ShopTab is the ideal choice for stores with a large inventory of products, or anyone who wants a clean, simple and attractive Facebook shop without breaking the bank.

Vendevor

Although smaller than some of its more popular counterparts, Vendevor is nevertheless a strong contender for a high quality Facebook e-commerce store provider. Using their hosted application and credit card processing, it takes just minutes to set up an online store, and then integrate it with Facebook.

Because they also offer credit card processing and a bank transfer option, Vendevor can also work as an alternative to Paypal for those merchants who cannot accept Paypal payments.

The service does have its limitations, however. For example, you can only add three variations per product. In addition, enabling coupon codes isn’t available until you buy the $29/month pro plan—something that many other Facebook e-commerce apps offer for free or a for lower price.

Still, if you want something that’s easy to set up and ready in minutes, Vendevor is happy to oblige. Even if you want to sell from your own site using a hosted solution, or you don’t have a site, you can still use their services by pasting in a few lines of code or setting up a subdomain (i.e. “yourstore.vendevor.com)

Beetailer

Although Beetailer doesn’t support as many platforms as some of the other Facebook shop services (it’s currently limited to Magento, MagentoGo, Amazon, Shopify and Prestashop), what it does, it does extremely well.

Beetailer blurs the lines between social and shopping by not just bringing your store to Facebook, but also bringing Facebook to your store. It does this by giving you the option of integrating your customers’ Facebook comments into your existing web store.

Users can also become fans by sharing their purchases on Twitter, bridging the gap between Facebook, commerce and other social networks. There are a variety of marketing tools built-in to Beetailer’s cloud-hosted system, which make it easy to schedule product listings, updates and sales.

A free option is available for up to 30 products. A premium account at $80/month removes the “Powered by Beetailer” link and lets you add up to 2,000 products in up to 5 stores. Optional services let you hire Beetailer’s developers to customize your store for you—a bonus if you dread mucking around in code.

Finally, Beetailer’s Custom Store option (currently in beta) looks like a promising way to add native shop functionality to Facebook—even if you don’t have a website or an online store using any of the aforementioned platforms.

Before You Make Your Decision…

There’s no definitive answer as to the “best Facebook shopping cart” or the “best Facebook e-commerce app.” Each one has its own pros and cons. At the very least, you’ll want to choose a social storefront that gives you the option of importing or carrying over your existing store’s feed to save you the hassle of manually re-entering product details.

You’ll also want to choose a package that gives you detailed Facebook e-commerce analytics, since you’ll want to know precisely how your store is performing with your audience.

But from that point on, you’ll need to ask yourself some questions to better understand your needs and requirements.

Are you comfortable with code and customization?

Do you need additional marketing tools or the flexibility to add and remove functionality as you promote your new store?

Do you need the flexibility of multiple shipping options and real-time shipping prices, or are you only selling digital products?

Choosing the right Facebook e-commerce app for your business is not a decision you should make lightly. After all, the solution you choose will have a direct impact on your revenues, return on investment and conversion rates. It can also have the ripple effect of leaving your customers satisfied and enthusiastic, or frustrated and annoyed.

Take the time to make a “shortlist” of potential front-runners and then take their free trials for a spin. This will give you the best possible reflection of what it’s like to be a “real customer” of the service.

And finally, don’t hesitate to take advantage of all available support avenues—their timeliness, knowledge and attentiveness to your needs are what’s truly going to separate the winners from the losers.

Share Your Thoughts!

Have you used one of these Facebook store providers? What did you think of them? Still not sure if selling on Facebook is a good idea? We want to hear from you! Share your feedback below in the comments and tell us about your experience.

DON’T MISS OUT

He delivers cutting edge solutions to an extensive portfolio of private, public & multinational companies both locally in the UK & internationally. His professional interests include, new business marketing and digital media. Connect with Gary on Linkedin, Twitter or Google+!

52 COMMENTS

Comment Policy

Please join the conversation! We like long and thoughtful communication.
Abrupt comments and gibberish will not be approved. Please, only use your real name, not your business name or keywords. We rarely allow links in your comment.
Finally, please use your favorite personal social media profile for the website field.

SPEAK YOUR MIND

Guys, all is good except – no comparison table (really time consuming when need manually compare it), and the most important thing – which countries those apps works?? in sense of making business (making sales) not buyers (most of them are accepting payments for businesses located in USA, or Europe, what about India, Brazil, Mexico and etc?)

I am interested in StoreYA but as far as I understand it is useful to have my store on facebook up to date. My problem is that I donot have a great number of facebook friends that are potential shoppers for my store. And, I think my shop will be seen only by them. I want to know that will it be helpful to make my shop visible to many other shoppers which are not my fb connections? Or, is there an app for this? Thanks

Great article Gary!
I want to ask something. Out of all these options, if I want to integrate an e-shop created with OpenCart, which one would be the best (and cheapest) option? A quick search I made, showed that only StoreYa is an option, or an extention for OpenCart.
Are those my only options?
Also, do these support every language? I am mostly interested in Greek, Russian, and slavic languages in general.

Nice post but as Emma said , all these Store has not more Facebook Store, maybe we should update the list, or write an article why they decided to not more use Facebook commerce.

and is it possible to add our solution www. addstore.com , we are not a pioneers like StoreYa . we are a start up. we focus on Micro and small business and specially for crafters. soo we offer a free solution (up to 50 products for free0 which can be a real issue for small business

thank Gary great info
i just need to know one more thing. i have a website with no shopping option ,at the moment , its link to etsy. however i d like to have my own one. i was thinking to get shopify . as it has a facebook shop as well. i was also thinking of getting store ya. but i dont understand why i will need store ya if i have a fb shop with shopify and some marketing. is there any other benefit besitos connecting all your shops together. thank you

Both SalesCart and Ecwid are free up to 10 products. You can start there and if its working and you are making money, you just invest a little and expand. In fact, for many, 10 products is all they ever need.

Thanks for the article, tried some one of this list. Ecwid is good . but actually i’m using another service www. addstore.com for my store (50 products ) it’s the best solution as it’s forever free and it was easy to set up

Facebook is a fantatic platform to build a business using the variety of applications available. Without not knowing your business goals, ambitions and budget, it’s a little difficult to advise further. But done correctly, fb ecommerce “could” work for your business.

However, for any serious business I do strongly advise on launching your own website. Done properly with fb, it will allow you to reachout further and develop trust, helping you to raise awarness targeting your local audience/customers who are essentially your golden ticket!

Just because you have a facebook store doesn’t mean you can’t have one on your website as well. With SalesCart, once you build your Facebook store, it lives on its “own” as well outside of Facebook and can be added directly into your website as well including a free plugin for WordPress (https:// wordpress.org/plugins/e-commerce-by-salescart/) Now, you are right that not all of them do this but both SalesCart and Ecwid accomplish 2, 3, 4, 5 birds with one stone at one time.

I own an a subzeroicecream.com franchise and do not currenly have a website associated with my business…only a facebook page (throuht which I use the domain “subzeromadison.com” for email only). I would like to either establish a website with an ecommerce platform so my customers can order online to pick up their orders in the store (I don’t plan on shipping ice cream) and also order and pre-pay for catering events (birthdy parties, weddings, school presentations, etc), t-shirts and giftcards or add this ecommerce capability to my facebook page. Which is the best way to go? The problem I have is that I don’t have that many products, but each product can have many options. For example: 1) You pick your Size (large, regular, small, kids), 2) you pick your Cream (4 dairy, 4 non-dairy, lactose-free, sugar-free), 3) you pick up to 3 of 40 Flavors, 4) You pick your mix-ins (first one free, extra charge for additional up to max of 3) and finally, 5) you pick how hard you want it frozen (hard, medium or soft). If I go with facebook app, which one will allow me all these options. Also, is there an app or commerce platform that will allow me to display the store menus that we currently have in our store, so the customer would see online that same thing that they would see if they walked up to our store counter? (For example, our menus are displayed on 5 vertical mounted 40″ TV screen menus.)

This may, or may not be for you but Fanpage toolkit is a complete F-commerce platform that fully empowers its users to create, trend, promote, market and ultimately sell products and services within the facebook ecosystem.

hi gary,
im new to setting up a facebook shop and have heard about fanbook toolkit but cant seen to find may reviews on it, have you used it at all and if so could you give me your thoughts on it please

Take a look at SalesCart. Its a free facebook shopping cart that has more features than any on your list including both a multi-step and single page checkout system and the user stays in Facebook from product to receipt. Shopify really is NOT a facebook store, it simply links you off of the Facebook platform. NEVER, NEVER do that…it leads to shopping cart abandonment. Anyway, you can’t beat free and for $35/month, SalesCart actually provides STANDARD credit card processing including a mobile card swipe without additional fees like gateway fees…just the normal transaction fees. However, at 2.6% they are lower than PayPal, Shopify and even square.

Thanks for that info! I was hopinbg for a simple answer, but it seems I may be called upon to make a decision. I particularly like where it says to “choose carefully”….. I want to, but what do I choose?!?!?!

Hi Julie. I feel your pain. These types of decisions are hard to make. I’d begin by listing the features you need and the price point you’d prefer. Then review each option again for the one that best fits your needs. If it helps, I’ve heard good things about Ecwid.

Thnak you! Great info and was very helpful to me as I am searching for a facebook shop solution. I am having trouble deciding bewteen ECWID and Shopify. I see that your review is based on the Shopify website option and not their FACEBOOK APP solution which is only $9. Do you have any comments or suggestions regarding the Shopify APP and how it compares to ECWID?

Shopify is not a “REAL” facebook app. Its really a regular old website store with a pretend Facebook Store. Look at salescart.com or ecwid.com. Both of these, the customer “STAYS” in Facebook product to receipt. This is important. Otherwise, you get “shopping cart abandonement” issues. The big difference between ecwid.com and salescart.com is that with SalesCart when its time to add credit card support beyond PayPal, they provide all that for you and the do it more securely because you don’t have to go and figure that piece out separately. Otherwise they are similar.

Useful information! Just want to add retailers should go for StoreHippo -a flexible E-commerce platform with latest technology, customized options, and SEO-rich tools. The retailers can also create mobile apps for their stores and woo mobile-savvy customers. With simplified logistics and integration with all leading payment gateways in India, you won’t regret it ever! Do try it.

If I am reading this correctly, StoreYa works like or is APP for facebook?

How is freight calculated? will StoreYa connect to our Magento platform and pull in the cost of freight from our site?

Currently, our orders are received in Magento store transferred thru Shipworks which holds the orders for our shipper to print and create labels. Once the order has shipped, Shipworks send a message back to Magento showing complete with tracking number.